If every discrete uprising is a repetition, a citation, then what happens has been happening for some time, is happening now again, a memory embodied anew, in events episodic, cumulative, and partially unforeseeable.
Judith Butler in Uprisings (ed. Georges Didi-Huberman)[1]

Australian‑born, Los Angeles based artist Jemima Wyman has positioned camouflage and mimicry as the cornerstones of her practice. Wyman’s body of work is replete with the iconography of contemporary protest culture drawn from the Occupy movements, as well as the Arab Spring and European revolts against austerity measures. She works fluidly across multimedia, sculpture and performance, photography, video, fabric design and archives. Wyman is the quintessential bowerbird, drawing from the largest and most unruly archive of all—the Internet. Like performance art, mass protests tend to be ephemeral, and rely on documentation and transmission through the Internet and social media.

Wyman’s longstanding interest in activist visual culture intersects with a broader renewal of interest in crowds and public forms of assembly. Since large numbers of protesters assembled in Egypt’s Tahrir Square in early 2011 demanded the overthrow of Hosni Mubarak, there has been a renewed focus on crowds, collective action and theorisations of radical or agonistic formulations of democracy.[2] Broadly speaking, radical democracy calls for the expansion of democracy beyond minimalist forms of participation. Thinkers as diverse as Laclau and Mouffe and Jacques Rancière have argued that conflict is an integral part of liberal democracies and requires cultivation.[3]

Responding to this surge of activity, global aCtIVISm curated for the ZKM Center for Art and Media in Karlsruhe by Peter Weibel in 2013–14 posited as the thesis of the exhibition that democracies are in crisis, eroded by the corrosive effects of neoliberal capital. Deficiencies in representative democracy and the unequal distribution of wealth have led to a new type of spontaneous, non‑institutional mass protest. Weibel argues this disenfranchisement has led to innovative forms of global activism that rely on basic human rights, such as the freedom of assembly, but also artistic and performative practices.[4] It is in this convergence between performance, art and theatre where the practice of Jemima Wyman sits.

Another key exhibition relevant to this global discussion around art, politics and activism is Soulèvements curated by French art historian Georges Didi‑Huberman for the Jeu de Paume, Paris, in 2016. Capturing the long and rich history of collective resistance Didi‑Huberman’s curatorial departure point was Aby Warburg’s incomplete project, Mnemosyne Atlas (1925–1929). Warburg famously created a montage of images from his photo library to trace the recurrence of gestures. For Didi‑Huberman the collision of images creates fresh lines of enquiry. Warburg’s enigmatic formulations of Nachleben (afterlife) and Pathosformel (pathos formula) informed a key provocation for Didi‑Huberman: “How do images draw so often from our memories in order to give shape to our desires for emancipation?”[5] Certain emotional gestures migrate and reappear, after long periods of dormancy, and are invested with a heightened degree of intensity.[6]

These reference points are useful for considering Wyman’s recycling of images as they circulate throughout her work, migrating across temporalities and contexts as the escalation of intensities and pressure points. Her practice is diverse and multifaceted, drawing on questions of feminism, collective identities and activism. In 2005 she formed CamLab, an ongoing feminist collaborative practice with Anna Mayer that began when they were graduate students at the California Institute of the Arts. The collaboration is based on social practice work and public engagement. In 2015 CamLab was the Wanlass Artist in Residence at Occidental College in Los Angeles. As one of the schools under investigation by the US Department of Education over its handling of sexual violence on campus, the residency provided a particularly potent pedagogical platform for exploring issues of power. With Respect To … (2015–16) encompassed three components: the first, The Reguarding Room, was an exhibition consisting of art‑historical images of rape and sexual assault. The second, Searching Centre, was a space designed to conduct workshops with students. The final, Holding, Hearing Court was a space where participants could select and deliver a public address from a binder containing a range of source texts.

Other iconic masks featuring in Wyman’s work are the multi‑coloured balaclavas worn by feminist punk band Pussy Riot. Imprisoned in the wake of their trial and conviction for the “punk prayer” performance in Moscow’s Cathedral of Christ the Savior in 2012, three members of the band were convicted for “hooliganism” and sentenced to two years in a Russian penal colony.[7]The balaclava quickly circulated to become a global symbol of resistance and challenge to state authority. The agency of the protesters is drawn from their anonymity. Paradoxically, it is the very absence of individual identity that constitutes a collective force standing for a larger idea. In highlighting the importance of Pussy Riot’s anonymity, Slavoj Žižek wrote: “This is why they wear balaclavas: masks of de‑individualization, of liberating anonymity. The message of their balaclavas is that it doesn’t matter which of them got arrested – they’re not individuals, they’re an Idea. And this is why they are such a threat: it is easy to imprison individuals, but try to imprison an Idea!”[8]

The unresolved tension between anonymity and collective identity, visibility and invisibility is the subject of a 2014 performance, Thronging Bluff Face, that took place at the Institute 4 Labor Generosity Workers & Uniforms at Long Beach in California. Wyman performed, her identity concealed by a patchwork quilt made up of various assorted prints including paisley bandanna patterns, camouflage material, and her own fabric designs. In this way Wyman exploits the audience’s desire for unmediated access to the artist’s body privileged by live performance, while simultaneously displacing this desire.[9] To accentuate this point, the costume is replete with not one, but three masks that can be worn interchangeably. The performance continued Wyman’s ongoing fascination in camouflage as a tool to enable the female body to evade objectification by the male gaze. The mask used as a form of camouflage permits the subject to surreptitiously return the gaze, further creating a disturbance in the visual field.[10]

The ambiguity between presence and absence, transparency and opacity is continued in Conjuring Radical Openness and Conjuring Power (2015). Underneath the bronze mask bust, there is nothing, only a void. The protester’s identity remains concealed. The bust is surrounded by vivid fabrics, revealing Wyman’s interest in the history of Soviet avant‑garde textile design. During the 1920s the Bolsheviks experimented with utopian dress in the search for innovative types of clothing appropriate for the new society that was being created. If every mask and pattern is a repetition, something new and powerful is created with each iteration. The visual language of the Russian avant‑garde returns from the past, haunting the present, as Wyman asks us: is this the fabric for our time?

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